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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
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    Under retributivism, punishment is appropriate only if it... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Supports→Reid's second argument for moral liberty fails if the sole purposes of punishment are preventative rather than retributive

    Under retributivism, punishment is appropriate only if it is deserved

    Justice & Punishment
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    Justice & Punishment

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    Free Will & Foreknowledge2 linkedMoral Responsibility1 linked

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    If purposes of punishment are exhausted by prevention rather than desert, the re...Reid's second argument depends on a retributivist conception of punishmentReid's second argument for moral liberty fails if the sole purposes of punishmen...Under retributivism, punishment is never deserved if the crime was not efficient...

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    Under retributivism, punishment is never deserved if the crime was not...92%Negative retributivism is framed as the view that it is impermissible ...90%Some retributivists hold that wrongdoers have a 'right to be punished'...88%The argument that retributivism justifies punishment better than conse...87%

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    SEP: reid
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    The first argument for moral liberty depends upon the inadequacy of any account of deliberation that leaves out the belief that our conduct is in our power. So the second depends upon the inadequacy of any account of what makes a person morally accountable that does not include the power to control action. Someone who wished to deny that human beings have power over their conduct, but are still morally accountable, might note, for instance, that one of the primary purposes of certain forms of pu

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